One Sixty Metre Crossband Radio
Summary: talk radio from vk3ase in Melbourne Australia on various subjects. Live to air on local and shortwave frequencies
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- Artist: Mr Stu
Podcasts:
Mr Branch after a bit of politics describes all the grand ideas he had when he was younger(28mins 11Meg) 1976
Syd a friend of the fish makes a visit during a crossband and gets a description of whats going on(19mins 7Meg) 1976
The Flinders talks about his time when employed at the Australian Broadcasting Commission during the early 1970's(19mins 7Meg) 1976
Classic Bek Stu missions from the naive period(92mins 38Meg) 1975
Mr Maize is very good at playing with the off normal contacts and producing nice screams on the old step by step system(10 min 3 Meg) 1986
early Bek Stu Xband Find out why the peg phone got smashed.(1hour 4mins 33Meg) 1975
The Branch, Flinders and with the help of a few others have got control of the multi megawatt transmitters of Radio Australia and are troubled by the fact that when they put them on the lights around the state dim. (1 hour 15mins, 40 meg) From 1976
Poor Mr Wetsdale has trouble getting through on the phone
The Kilt designed and built a super monitoring station in one of the earths quiet zones.(42 mins 17Meg) from 1977
This Guy was only around for a while but quite amazing to listen to.(2hours 31 mins 68Meg) 1977
Some interesting log tapes from the much used vk3ase trunking system of the early 1980's(1hour32mins 44Meg)
Comments on Beks trip to the isle of mud.(18mins 11Meg) 1988
Stu and Bek discuss how wartime would have been like in down town Glenhuntly.(10mins 4Meg) 1976
Recorded during a big storm some easter decades ago. Quite funny and has a spoken id at start.
This podcast is THE NIGHT THE SKY FELL IN recorded the night the skylab crashed. As you will hear people were ringing in to report bright lights in the sky and loud noises but the experts on the ABC were saying that they must be mistaken as the skylab was going to fall safely at sea. Any one who has been to the skylab museum at Esperence in Western Australia can plainly see that a lot of big and heavy stuff did actually fall on the land.